Mali hotel attackers might have jihadist links

Investigators said on Monday that they found phone numbers and addresses on the bodies of the "terrorists" which suggested they were affiliated with the Macina Liberation Front (FLM), a new Islamic extremist group drawn from the Fulani people of central Mali.

worldUpdated: Aug 11, 2015 12:59 IST

AFP

Investigation following the siege at a Mali hotel on Friday suspect that the attack may have been the work of an Islamist organisation with ties to an Al-Qaeda linked group.

Investigators said on Monday that they found phone numbers and addresses on the bodies of the "terrorists" which suggested they were affiliated with the Macina Liberation Front (FLM), a new Islamic extremist group drawn from the Fulani people of central Mali.

The hostage crisis, which began early Friday, ended nearly 24 hours later when Malian troops stormed the Byblos Hotel in the central town of Sevare.

The government said four soldiers, five UN workers and four "terrorists" were killed. Among the victims were two Ukrainians, a Nepalese, a South African and a Malian driver, according to the UN mission in Mali.

"Investigators found telephone numbers and address on the bodies of the terrorists... which supports the FLM theory," a security source said, indicating that an identity card found on one of the bodies showed he was from the Macina area, in central Mali.

"At this stage there is no formal proof that it was the Macina Liberation Front, but strong suspicions point to this group that has been seeking notoriety at all costs," she said.

However, a jihadist associated with radical Islamic leader Amadou Koufa and the Al-Qaeda-linked group Mokhtar Belmokhtar, which is based in Algeria, claimed responsibility for the attack.

"The hand of Allah has guided the mujahedeen of Sevare against the enemies of Islam," Souleyman Mohamed Kennen told an AFP reporter in Bamako during a brief telephone interview. He added that Koufa had given his blessing for the attack.

Separately, three soldiers were killed and four wounded on Monday when their vehicle hit an improvised explosive device near the town of Diabozo, near Sevare, the government said in a statement.

It was not immediately clear who may have been behind the attack.

The west African country has seen a surge in jihadist violence in recent months despite a peace deal signed in June. The FLM, which emerged earlier this year, has claimed a number of attacks, some targeting security forces in central Mali.

It is considered linked to Ansar Dine - Arabic for "defenders of the faith" - one of the groups that took control of Mali's vast arid north in April 2012. Washington added Ansar Dine to its terror blacklist in 2013, accusing it of close ties to Al-Qaeda and of torturing and killing opponents in the north. Mauritanian news agency Al-Akhbar, which regularly publishes jihadist statements, also said the FLM could be behind Friday's attack in Sevare.

'Like a war zone'

Details of the deadly siege emerged on Monday with the family of one of the victims saying he had been sending them messages on WhatsApp during the shootout.

Roelof "Jaco" Janse van Rensburg, a South African rescue worker, managed to message his family from the hotel bathroom where he was hiding for hours as the drama played out, his brother-in-law told AFP.

"He was saying it (was) like a war zone out there," Cobus Smal told AFP, saying the messages had gone on for hours until his brother-in-law's phone battery had died during the evening. "Everybody was hiding, they were trapped in their rooms."

The family heard nothing until the next afternoon when they were told he was dead.

A Malian military source confirmed that foreign special forces had been involved when they stormed the hotel, without giving further details. By Monday, life had returned to normal in Sevare, with several marriages also taking place, although security remained high, with troops in the town and along the road to the regional capital Mopti.

The Byblos Hotel was in ruins with bullet-riddled walls, doors torn from their hinges and sheets and pillows were stained with blood, images obtained by AFP showed. Located 620 kilometres (385 miles) northeast of the capital Bamako, Sevare is a key staging post on the road to Mali's vast desert north which fell to Islamic extremists in 2012.

A French-led offensive routed Islamist groups from their northern strongholds the following year, but swathes of the desert region remain lawless. The hotel attack came as the former French colony seeks to implement a June peace deal with armed groups to end years of unrest and ethnic divisions.

Jihadist attacks have long been concentrated in the north, but began spreading earlier this year to the centre, and in June to the south near the borders with Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso. Two attacks this month in central and northern Mali left 13 soldiers dead.